THE PICKWICK MILL was built from 1856 to 1858 by Thomas Grant and Wilson Davis and is one of the oldest flour mills found in southeast Minnesota. The mill was the first water powered gristmill constructed first as a sawmill, and later converted to a flour gristmill, on the banks of Big Trout Creek located in Pickwick, Minnesota. It is the firest commercial flour mil west of the Mississippi reiver.The mill ran 24 hours a day during the Civil War and produced 100 barrels daily for the Union Army. After the war, the mill became a flour-milling center for most of southern Minnesota and portions of Iowa and Wisconsin.

The mill was built from locally quarried limestone, with a timber frame that was so closely fit, that nails were not used (outside of the floor). The six story building was severely damaged in 1907 when a tornado took off the roof and top storage room. The mill was then retrofitted with a flat plank roof. The mill has been restored to a gable roof that is reminiscent of the original design.

Today the mill is administered as a historic site by Pickwick Mill Inc., a privately funded, non-profit organization.